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The Ideal City

The Ideal City
Author: Helen Rosenau
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 212
Release: 2013-01-11
Genre: Science
ISBN: 1135676399

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The concept of the 'ideal city' is, perhaps, more important today - when planners and architects are so firmly confined by considerations of our immediate environment - than ever before. Yet it is a concept which has profoundly influenced the western world throughout history, both as a regulative model and as an inspiration. Rosenau traces the progress of the concept from biblical sources through the hellenistic and Roman empires to the Renaissance and the later Age of Enlightenment, when the emphasis shifted from religious to social considerations. She goes on to discuss the resultant nineteenth-century ideal planning, when the idea of social betterment was approached with a specific and conscious effort. This book was first published in 1983.


God's Weigh to Your Ideal Body Weight

God's Weigh to Your Ideal Body Weight
Author: Michael Scott Lowery
Publisher: WestBow Press
Total Pages: 291
Release: 2013-03
Genre: Health & Fitness
ISBN: 144978657X

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As a Believer, reaching and maintaining your ideal body weight is your birthright. This is God's will for your life. You are called to glorify God in your body. And you should know that the Bible is the greatest health and weight loss book ever written. God's people have become tired, sick, overweight, and are living a fraction of the years God intended. This is not God's will for you. God has a better plan for you and the church. Has man's wisdom let you down? Are you now ready to reach your ideal body weight God's Weigh? In God's Weigh to Your Ideal Body Weight you will learn that what you eat matters to God, the five spiritual keys to reaching your ideal body weight, God's diet plan, seven practical suggestions for reaching your ideal body weight, and how a healthy church can draw the world to Jesus Christ.


The Place of the Ideal Community in Urban Planning

The Place of the Ideal Community in Urban Planning
Author: Thomas A. Reiner
Publisher: University of Pennsylvania Press
Total Pages: 196
Release: 2016-11-11
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 1512806102

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This book is a volume in the Penn Press Anniversary Collection. To mark its 125th anniversary in 2015, the University of Pennsylvania Press rereleased more than 1,100 titles from Penn Press's distinguished backlist from 1899-1999 that had fallen out of print. Spanning an entire century, the Anniversary Collection offers peer-reviewed scholarship in a wide range of subject areas.


The Ideal Ministry

The Ideal Ministry
Author: Herrick Johnson
Publisher:
Total Pages: 554
Release: 1908
Genre: Church group work
ISBN:

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The Nature of Normativity

The Nature of Normativity
Author: Ralph Wedgwood
Publisher: OUP Oxford
Total Pages: 320
Release: 2007-07-19
Genre: Philosophy
ISBN: 0191530697

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The Nature of Normativity presents a complete theory about the nature of normative thought — that is, the sort of thought that is concerned with what ought to be the case, or what we ought to do or think. Ralph Wedgwood defends a kind of realism about the normative, according to which normative truths or facts are genuinely part of reality. Anti-realists often complain that realism gives rise to demands for explanation that it cannot adequately meet. What is the nature of these normative facts? How we could ever know them or even refer to them in language or thought? Wedgwood accepts that any adequate version of realism must answer these explanatory demands. However, he seeks to show that these demands can be met - in large part by relying on a version of the idea, which has been much discussed in recent work in the philosophy of mind, that the intentional is normative - that is, that there is no way of explaining the nature of the various sorts of mental states that have intentional or representational content (such as beliefs, judgments, desires, decisions, and so on), without stating normative facts. On the basis of this idea, Wedgwood provides a detailed systematic theory that deals with the following three areas: the meaning of statements about what ought to be; the nature of the facts stated by these statements; and what justifies us in holding beliefs about what ought to be.


Ideal Power

Ideal Power
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 396
Release: 1911
Genre: Electric engineering
ISBN:

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The Urban Archetypes of Jane Jacobs and Ebenezer Howard

The Urban Archetypes of Jane Jacobs and Ebenezer Howard
Author: Abraham Akkerman
Publisher: University of Toronto Press
Total Pages: 275
Release: 2020
Genre: History
ISBN: 1487501269

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Ebenezer Howard, an Englishman, and Jane Jacobs, a naturalized Canadian, personify the twentieth century's opposing outlooks on cities. Howard had envisaged small towns, newly built from scratch, fashioned on single family homes with small gardens. Jacobs embraced existing inner-city neighbourhoods emphasizing the verve of the living street. From Howard's idea, the American Dream of garden suburbs had emerged, yet his conceptualization of a modern city received criticism for being uniform and alienated from the rest of the city. Similarly, at the turn of the new century, Jacobs' inner-city neighbourhoods came to be recognized as the result of commodification, vacillating between poverty and newly discovered hubs of urban authenticity. Presenting Howard and Jacobs within a psychocultural context, The Urban Archetypes of Jane Jacobs and Ebenezer Howard addresses our urban crisis in the recognition that "city form" is a gendered, allegorical medium expressing femininity and masculinity within two founding features of the built environment: void and volume. Both founding contrasts bring tensions, but also the opportunities of fusion between pairs of urban polarities: human scale against superscale, gait against speed, and spontaneity against surveillance. Jacobs and Howard, in their respective attitudes, have come to embrace the two ancient archetypes, the Garden and the Citadel, leaving it to future generations to blend their two contrarian stances.


Arguing about Alliances

Arguing about Alliances
Author: Paul Poast
Publisher: Cornell University Press
Total Pages: 258
Release: 2019-11-15
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 1501740253

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Why do some attempts to conclude alliance treaties end in failure? From the inability of European powers to form an alliance that would stop Hitler in the 1930s, to the present inability of Ukraine to join NATO, states frequently attempt but fail to form alliance treaties. In Arguing about Alliances, Paul Poast sheds new light on the purpose of alliance treaties by recognizing that such treaties come from negotiations, and that negotiations can end in failure. In a book that bridges Stephen Walt's Origins of Alliance and Glenn Snyder's Alliance Politics, two classic works on alliances, Poast identifies two conditions that result in non-agreement: major incompatibilities in the internal war plans of the participants, and attractive alternatives to a negotiated agreement for various parties to the negotiations. As a result, Arguing about Alliances focuses on a group of states largely ignored by scholars: states that have attempted to form alliance treaties but failed. Poast suggests that to explain the outcomes of negotiations, specifically how they can end without agreement, we must pay particular attention to the wartime planning and coordinating functions of alliance treaties. Through his exploration of the outcomes of negotiations from European alliance negotiations between 1815 and 1945, Poast offers a typology of alliance treaty negotiations and establishes what conditions are most likely to stymie the attempt to formalize recognition of common national interests.